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The Intel senior VP and GM of its Digital Enterprise Group kicked off his Intel Developer Forum keynote with a tour of a digital landscape featuring Internet-connected vehicles and home electronic devices, then closed it out with a peek at Larrabee. The upshot being that Intel thinks there will be 15 billion devices connected to the Internet by 2015 -- naturally, a giant chunk will be powered by Intel chips -- and that, fairly bombastically, "there's no end to the possibilities that Larrabee enables" for graphics developers.
In between those book-ends was the meat of the keynote, an update on the highly anticipated new client and server chips from Santa Clara, Calif.-based Intel codenamed Nehalem and branded Core i7.
Nehalem represents the "tock" in the chip giant's famed "tick-tock" strategy for alternating manufacturing process advances with microarchitecture advances across its main CPU families roughly every year or so, meaning the "ticks" and "tocks" overlap within Intel's major new product lines. Penryn, last year's process transition to 45nm, was the most recent "tick," with the transition to 32nm, or Westmere, due in the 2009-10 timeframe.
Intel's first Nehalem chips will feature 45nm process technology and later publications will be 32nm products, with Sandy Bridge, the microarchitecture "tock" following Nehalem, appearing first on 32nm devices and then 22nm chips, and so forth.
Intel revealed earlier this month that the first Core i7 chip to come off the line will be an "Extreme Edition" quad-core desktop processor codenamed Bloomfield, scheduled for production in the fourth quarter. That product is reportedly a 3.2GHz processor that will be priced at $999. Two more quad-core Bloomfield chips are reportedly set to follow the black-logoed Extreme device -- a 2.93GHz Core i7 believed to be priced at $562 and a 2.66GHz Core i7 that will sell for $284, both desktop processors.
The first Nehalem server product will be a DP server processor codenamed Gainestown. This unnamed product -- it's not clear if it will be branded Core i7, Xeon or something else entirely -- will also begin production in the fourth quarter, according to a recent Intel presentation to partners obtained by ChannelWeb.
Next: Nehalem Production Ramp And Features
